Shelter-in-place 951 projects
#32
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Thread Starter
It was an old Coca-Cola stool but the upholstery was all torn up, so I had it redone by my local auto upholstery guy. He did this stool as a favor and tried to match the grey/red theme of my new garage. He's a good guy and did this whole interior for me a few years ago...
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finally! (03-28-2020)
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finally! (03-28-2020)
#35
Pro
#36
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Beautiful engine bay Nurburger, and great photography!
Since I have all the time in the world, I decided to clean the inner door before I put it back together. The vapor barrier was cut and ripped in a million places, covered in duct tape, and to make things much worse, I previously covered the door in Dynamat sound insulation, so there was gummy black butyl all over the door. Two hours later it looks like new and I have a brand new PCNA vapor barrier ready to go on. By the way, I've recently discovered that Porsche of Marin has an active mail-order business and, so far, everything they sell has been slightly cheaper than Sunset. And, they are way faster to ship. I order the vapor barriers on Tuesday. They had to get them from PCNA, of course, but still had them on my doorstep by today (Friday). Worth considering if you are ordering factory parts online....
Since I have all the time in the world, I decided to clean the inner door before I put it back together. The vapor barrier was cut and ripped in a million places, covered in duct tape, and to make things much worse, I previously covered the door in Dynamat sound insulation, so there was gummy black butyl all over the door. Two hours later it looks like new and I have a brand new PCNA vapor barrier ready to go on. By the way, I've recently discovered that Porsche of Marin has an active mail-order business and, so far, everything they sell has been slightly cheaper than Sunset. And, they are way faster to ship. I order the vapor barriers on Tuesday. They had to get them from PCNA, of course, but still had them on my doorstep by today (Friday). Worth considering if you are ordering factory parts online....
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SamGrant951 (03-28-2020)
#37
Racer
Beautiful engine bay Nurburger, and great photography!
Since I have all the time in the world, I decided to clean the inner door before I put it back together. The vapor barrier was cut and ripped in a million places, covered in duct tape, and to make things much worse, I previously covered the door in Dynamat sound insulation, so there was gummy black butyl all over the door. Two hours later it looks like new and I have a brand new PCNA vapor barrier ready to go on. By the way, I've recently discovered that Porsche of Marin has an active mail-order business and, so far, everything they sell has been slightly cheaper than Sunset. And, they are way faster to ship. I order the vapor barriers on Tuesday. They had to get them from PCNA, of course, but still had them on my doorstep by today (Friday). Worth considering if you are ordering factory parts online....
Since I have all the time in the world, I decided to clean the inner door before I put it back together. The vapor barrier was cut and ripped in a million places, covered in duct tape, and to make things much worse, I previously covered the door in Dynamat sound insulation, so there was gummy black butyl all over the door. Two hours later it looks like new and I have a brand new PCNA vapor barrier ready to go on. By the way, I've recently discovered that Porsche of Marin has an active mail-order business and, so far, everything they sell has been slightly cheaper than Sunset. And, they are way faster to ship. I order the vapor barriers on Tuesday. They had to get them from PCNA, of course, but still had them on my doorstep by today (Friday). Worth considering if you are ordering factory parts online....
My own shelter-in projects have included removing disgusting and tenacious old rock guards, paint touch up, and doing 2000 grit wet sanding and polishing to reduce orang peel. Plus building a DIY sim racing rig. Stay healthy, my friends!
#38
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Racking up air miles....
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The Vitesse MAF kit is a great upgrade. When I bought the 951 it had an old Autothority MAF on it which we removed once we came up with the plan for all of the other modifications. Vitesse is very friendly with other mods such as bigger turbos, 3" exhaust etc.
#39
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Here's the new vapor shield and a before and after of the passenger door. The passenger side had a rattle of unknown origin, and it turned out just about every bolt on the door was finger tight, so I'm hoping just re-installing everything tightly will do the trick. But, of course, I had to clean it up before I put on the new vapor barrier, so did a proper before and after this time.
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SamGrant951 (03-29-2020)
#40
Track Day
Know the feeling.
Replaced brake rotors, cleaned up calipers, bought more aggressive brake pads, and a set of Nitto NT-01's. Head and block machined, new head studs, dual port wastegate and MBC. Larger radiator, intercooler and oil cooler.
All PCA track events in the area cancelled into the foreseeable future. All dressed up and no place to go.
Replaced brake rotors, cleaned up calipers, bought more aggressive brake pads, and a set of Nitto NT-01's. Head and block machined, new head studs, dual port wastegate and MBC. Larger radiator, intercooler and oil cooler.
All PCA track events in the area cancelled into the foreseeable future. All dressed up and no place to go.
#41
Track Day
Beautiful engine bay Nurburger, and great photography!
Since I have all the time in the world, I decided to clean the inner door before I put it back together. The vapor barrier was cut and ripped in a million places, covered in duct tape, and to make things much worse, I previously covered the door in Dynamat sound insulation, so there was gummy black butyl all over the door. Two hours later it looks like new and I have a brand new PCNA vapor barrier ready to go on. By the way, I've recently discovered that Porsche of Marin has an active mail-order business and, so far, everything they sell has been slightly cheaper than Sunset. And, they are way faster to ship. I order the vapor barriers on Tuesday. They had to get them from PCNA, of course, but still had them on my doorstep by today (Friday). Worth considering if you are ordering factory parts online....
Since I have all the time in the world, I decided to clean the inner door before I put it back together. The vapor barrier was cut and ripped in a million places, covered in duct tape, and to make things much worse, I previously covered the door in Dynamat sound insulation, so there was gummy black butyl all over the door. Two hours later it looks like new and I have a brand new PCNA vapor barrier ready to go on. By the way, I've recently discovered that Porsche of Marin has an active mail-order business and, so far, everything they sell has been slightly cheaper than Sunset. And, they are way faster to ship. I order the vapor barriers on Tuesday. They had to get them from PCNA, of course, but still had them on my doorstep by today (Friday). Worth considering if you are ordering factory parts online....
#42
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
I haven't been on the highway yet without the dynamat in the doors, but at least around town I didn't notice an obvious difference. The dynamat made a big difference on the metal floor/hump where I deleted the rear seat, but otherwise I'm not a big fan of the butyl-like goo that is just a mess if you ever need to get under it again. I'd guess the more of it you use inside the cabin, the lower the noise on a meter, but not sure how much of that translates into a real-world difference in driving experience. I'd use it for known problem areas (like the rear hump) but wouldn't slather my car in it. It's a lot of weight and mess for a marginal difference (assuming you still have your stock sound insulation everywhere).
#43
Track Day
I haven't been on the highway yet without the dynamat in the doors, but at least around town I didn't notice an obvious difference. The dynamat made a big difference on the metal floor/hump where I deleted the rear seat, but otherwise I'm not a big fan of the butyl-like goo that is just a mess if you ever need to get under it again. I'd guess the more of it you use inside the cabin, the lower the noise on a meter, but not sure how much of that translates into a real-world difference in driving experience. I'd use it for known problem areas (like the rear hump) but wouldn't slather my car in it. It's a lot of weight and mess for a marginal difference (assuming you still have your stock sound insulation everywhere).
#44
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
I'm now upgrading the a/c to Griffiths stuff and converting to r134a finally. I opted for a Griffiths 134a-friendly condenser (which looks very nice) and am waiting on Porsche to deliver new rubber air seals, since my were all chewed up. So, obviously, I had to clean and wax the radiator frame while waiting...
#45
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Success! Got the new A/C parts installed and converted to 134a finally. The old compressor was leaking oil, so that was the final straw that got me to fix it all. Props to Griffiths for supplying the parts -- 134a-friendly parallel flow condenser, factory-rebuilt compressor, receiver/drier, hose, O-rings, oil, pretty much everything but the 134a and tools to get it in. (Speaking of which, the Harbor Freight 134a gauge set it pure garbage! I'm already in the market for a better set.) Taking out the factory condenser was much easier than I feared. Just undo the refrigerant lines, remove two bolts, and the thing slides down and out. Easy peasy. Overall, it was a very straight-forward project with no memorable nightmares. Only surprise that slowed me down was waiting for new rubber seals that go in behind the condenser. With all the perfect new parts, I couldn't live with the torn up old rubber. It's a little over 80 degrees here today and I was able to see temps in the 30's from the dash if I nursed it just right. My pressures were on the low side (40 and 170) so I probably could add a smidge more 134a, but I may wait for a day in the 90's or higher to fine tune. Overall very happy with the results and probably should have made the conversion years ago.
New rubber seals make me happy.
New compressor.
Griffith's condenser.
Before.
After
New rubber seals make me happy.
New compressor.
Griffith's condenser.
Before.
After
The following 2 users liked this post by Tom M'Guinn:
Chalt (08-15-2020),
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